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Off I-20 via US 65 [Tallulah Exit] or Enjoy the refuge The public is welcome to visit the refuge any time of the year. At the Visitor Center you'll find brochures, life-size exhibits, species lists, a Boardwalk Wildlife Trail, information, regulations, and refuge maps. You'll see wildlife! Rare birds, turkeys, ducks, geese, bear, deer, and armadillo, and more. You'll see ancient bottomland forests and botanicals. Lush greenery in summertime.
Primitive canoe launching offers a unique opportunity to explore the bottomland hardwoods by boat (area is marked on the refuge map), and there are also marked hiking trails. Public hunting is allowed on the refuge for migratory waterfowl, upland and big game species. Hunting white-tailed deer is especially popular. Open year-round for fishing on Africa, Judd, Buck, and Rainey Lakes. The remainder of refuge waters are open to fishing March 1 -- October 31. The Tensas River NWR might be the home of the largest black bear population in Louisiana. The Atchafalaya Basin also is home to bear, and bears from the Tensas refuge have been captured and released in the lower part of Concordia Parish along the Mississippi.
What kind of wildlife might you see?
Seasonal wildlife visitors: Migratory ducks use the forest in the winter while many song and wading birds arrive in the spring.
Few endangered species include
North America's largest woodpecker, Ivory-billed Woodpecker, is thought to be extinct by most scientists, and it required large tracts of very old trees. One of the last verified recordings of the ivory-bill occurred in the early 1940's on what was called the "Singer Tract" and is now the Tensas River National Wildlife Refuge property. Links for additional information: Directions to the Refuge: http://www.fws.gov/tensasriver/tensas_map.html http://www.ivory-bill-woodpecker.com/ivory-bill-news.htm http://www.fws.gov/southeast/carbon/TensasRiver.html http://www.fws.gov/tensasriver/
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